Tuesday 6 December 2022

Horace Silver Quintet - 'Song For My Father'

While on the subject of rhythm... Here's a man who was one of the first to get the funk into jazz. His 'Opus de Funk' came out in 1953, so he knew what he was about from the start. Horace Silver is celebrated as a leading precursor of a type of small-group soul-jazz that would prove really popular in the mid-to-late Fifties and on into the Sixties, embracing the likes of Art Blakey's Jazz Messengers, Cannonball Adderley, the Jazztet, the Jazz Crusaders and Lee Morgan, whose smash, 'The Sidewinder', was the genre's commercial apogee. The keynote was simplicity: an emphasis on melody and rhythm allied to improvisations on (mainly) sax, trumpet and piano anchored to a catchy theme. Little room for the kind of contemporary experimentations of, say, Sonny Rollins, John Coltrane or Thelonious Monk.

Young Horace learnt both piano and tenor sax, which possibly contributed to a piano style that was rhythmic and uncluttered. His father, who handed Horace one of his middle names, Tavares, was originally from the Cape Verde Isles and you can detect the influence of the islands' unique indigenous music on Silver's version of jazz: a kind of joie de vivre tinged with a darker, melancholic edge. (That's the pianist's old man in a straw hat, puffing on a big fat cigar on the cover of Silver's most famous of his many, many albums for Blue Note, Song For My Father.)

His mother sang with a gospel choir, and the influence of gospel is clearly there, too, in his music's soulful simplicity. Before he ceded the enduring ensemble to Art Blakey, Horace Silver's Jazz Messengers had a hit with 'The Preacher'. Other titles he chose, like 'Sister Sadie', 'Juicy Lucy', 'The Jody Grind', 'Doodlin'', 'Finger Poppin'' and 'That Healin' Feelin'', give strong clues to Silver's house style. It must have had an effect on the young Ramsey Lewis, among others, whose piano trio would strike gold for the Chess label in the Sixties with the gospel staple, 'Wade In The Water'.

For once, it didn't take me long to find this video. As soon as I watched it, I knew I'd need look no further. It was one of those videos that bring copious tears to the eye, for some inexplicable reason known only to my innermost psyche. Perhaps it was the sight of Horace in a floral shirt, with his normally slicked-back hair falling chaotically over his eyes. Maybe it was the balmy Umbrian setting. Anyway, it's perfect in almost every respect: the setting, the number itself, the sound quality, the sharpness of image, the featured musicians, the ensemble and solo playing. 'Almost' because Bob Berg's otherwise splendid tenor sax solo maybe goes on about a minute too long and lapses into a bit of showboating: the squawking and over-blowing of a Coltrane, Sanders or Archie Shepp never seem to suit the intrinsically unfussy nature of soul-jazz. Still, it's otherwise a very fine solo, and unlike so many fellow jazzers of the time, Berg stuck religiously to a post-bop format rather than adopt a trendy, contemporary electro-jazz fusion – although he would go on to play for three years the following decade with the godfather of electrified jazz, Miles Davis.

The band is made up of Steve Beskrone, who does a solid job on electric bass; drummer Eddie Gladden, who was latterly most closely associated with Dexter Gordon; and Tom Harrell, one of the most cultivated and lyrical of modern trumpeters, who spent four years with Horace Silver and six the following decade with alto saxophonist, Phil Woods. He also had the distinction of playing with pianist Vince Guaraldi on some of the Charlie Brown TV specials. My first introduction to a favourite trumpeter – had I but known. It may not have been Horace Silver's classic quintet that spanned the late Fifties and early Sixties and included Junior Cook on tenor and the ever-splendid Blue Mitchell on trumpet (which you can catch in a superb recording of 'Señor Blues' from 1959 live in Paris, featuring a rather more neatly attired and coiffed pianist), but this was a band every bit as distinguished as Bob Berg's straw hat.

The pianist kicks things off with that famous riff that was borrowed by Donald Fagen for Steely Dan's 'Rikki Don't Lose That Number', the memorable opener of Pretzel Logic. The band joins in, as tight as a pair of support stockings, before Horace Silver takes the first solo, demonstrating his percussive, crab-like technique on the eighty-eights. Note the way he ups the tempo at around the three-and-a-half minute mark and then observe how first Tom Harrell and then Bob Berg mirror this idea in their solos. This was a well rehearsed band. After another statement of theme, Silver rounds things off with a nice coda that echoes his first, longer solo. Stunning.

By the time of this performance, Silver was touring only six months per year in order to spend more time at home with his family. His 28-year tenure with Blue Note would end with the Seventies, and the following decade he reduced his schedule still further. An increasing interest in matters spiritual led him to write lyrics for some of his compositions and by the time I saw him, at the Brighton Dome in 1987, he had added a vocalist to his group of the time: Andy Bey, whose fruity baritone was as disconcerting as Johnny Hartman's or Billy Eckstine's. Still, one shouldn't spurn nor regret the chance to see a legend in concert.

After dabbling in multi-media productions and running a not very successful record label, Silver signed for first Columbia and then Impulse! before fading from the scene as he gradually succumbed to Alzheimer's disease. Even so, he made it to 85, a great age for a jazz musician. Significantly, he entitled his first release for Columbia It's Got To Be Funky. Horace Silver was a man with a credo.

Saturday 12 November 2022

Weather Report - Teen Town

I am a man who likes his rhythm – one reason, I guess, why I love Latin Jazz so much: all the glories that you associate with jazz, but with added congas and timbales. Rhythm and melody: it’s a lethal combination. Weather Report always seemed to have it in spades. Apart from the occasional tendency to noodle, the band was for the most part a combination of memorable compositions allied to some of the hardest rhythms and fiercest percussion this side of Tito Puente. The rhythm section seemed to change as frequently as Atlantic weather fronts, but the roll-call of percussionists reads like an international who’s who: Airto Moreira and Dom Um Romao from Brazil, Alex Acuna from Peru, Manolo Badrena from Puerto Rico and drummers of the calibre of Alphonse Mouzon, Chester Thompson and Pete Erskine, who powered one of Weather Report’s prime ‘competitors’, Steps Ahead.

The quintessential 1970s jazz-funk outfit in some respects, Weather Report was the lovechild of two remarkable talents. Austrian composer and keyboards wizard, Josef Zawinul, a kind of Rick Wakeman in a hat like a tea-cosy, studied – at a prodigiously young age – classical music at the Vienna Conservatory. Legend has it that he saw the film Stormy Weather an unfeasible 24 times. It must have marked him for life, because he knew then that he wanted to play jazz with black musicians – which is exactly what he did. Arriving in the U.S. on a scholarship to Berklee College of Music in Boston, he wasted no time insinuating himself into the jazz scene. After a stint with the turbulent Dinah Washington, he soon became a key figure in Cannonball Adderley’s group, playing the kind of melodic and funky soul-jazz that must have warmed the cockles of a heart that yearned to play with 'the serious funk guys'. Among his contributions to the group’s renown was his classic ‘Mercy Mercy Mercy’, which won the outfit a Grammy award. From there, he was recruited in 1969 by Miles Davis to provide electric keyboards on two of his most seminal, scene-shifting albums, In A Silent Way and Bitches Brew (which featured lots of raw funk, but never an apostrophe).

It wasn’t long before he hooked up with saxophonist Wayne Shorter, a key figure in the great Miles Davis Quintet of the 1960s. ‘Mr. Weird’, as he was known at school and beyond, had served a long and fruitful apprenticeship with Art Blakey’s Jazz Messengers before becoming one of Davis’ ground-breaking famous five for six years of gently but firmly pushing the frontiers of jazz. Detractors of the group that he and Zawinul founded in 1971 complain that Weather Report over time became the Viennese composer’s baby, while Shorter’s role was gradually reduced to little more than a colourist. Shorter himself, though, talked of how ‘colours really started coming’ during his tenure with Davis. It was almost as if he purposefully blew away the echoes of John Coltrane during his time with Blakey to concentrate instead on how to use space and suggestion and understatement in his later improvisations on tenor and soprano sax. He it was who christened the band Weather Report, in recognition of Zawinul’s search to make music that would constantly change like the weather. This quest for atmosphere and evanescent beauty seemed to be the tie that bound the wonderful compositions that they both individually came up with during Weather Report’s golden period spanning 1974’s Mysterious Traveller and 1977’s Heavy Weather. I think of the two pillars principally as composers who could also play whatever and however the music required. 'Sagas,' Shorter described their numbers, 'musical sagas. Dialogue with more theatre going on in the music.' When I first heard Shorter’s generally acknowledged masterpiece for Blue Note in 1964, Speak No Evil, it wasn’t so much the brilliance of the playing and more the misty, moody, slightly eerie compositions that rooted me to the spot.

In Weather Report such beautiful, haunting melodies were rooted in exhilarating rhythms. 'Many people called us a cerebral kind of thing,' Zawinul complained. 'They were dead wrong. The shit was totally gut music – but not stupid.' And after their first two albums, he told his co-founder, 'I'm gonna write some serious rhythmic stuff, otherwise we can give it up as a band.' It wasn’t only the drummers and percussionists who would stoke the serious rhythmic stuff, of course, it was also the electric bass players. On my favourite album of theirs, Tale Spinnin’, it’s Alphonso Johnson’s fluid, elastic bass playing that helps to make it probably the funkiest of all Weather Report records. 'Now we were not only funky, we played intelligent shit,' Zawinul suggested. 'It allowed Wayne and me all that space because the rhythm section wasn't all over the place. They were smokin'.' (What drove Johnson from the band 'was the fact that I played with so many different drummers.') But then along came Jaco. The manic loose cannon from Florida, John Francis Anthony (‘Jaco’) Pastorius III, destined to meet a violent and tragic end outside a Florida bar at the age of just 35, introduced himself to Zawinul as ‘the greatest bass player in the world’. You would never know it by looking at the instrument he called the ‘Bass of Doom’, a beaten up 1962 Fender jazz bass from which he removed the frets supposedly with a butter knife. This is what he plays on my perennially favourite Joni Mitchell album, Hejira, on all the Weather Report albums between his joining in 1976 and departing in 1982, and on the video I have chosen (after considerable mental debate).

Whether the greatest or not, it’s undeniable that Jaco Pastorius transformed the way that the electric bass was played in a jazz context, in the same way that Bootsy Collins and Larry Graham taught others to slap the funk out of their bass guitars. Described by Christian McBride, one of the modern greats of the double bass, as 'the Charlie Parker of electric bass', Pastorius talked of learning to feel the instrument, to know exactly where and how to touch the strings to make it sing. Here was another colourist, then; another brilliant composer, capable of writing numbers like ‘River People’, ‘Three Views of a Secret’ and ‘Teen Town’, along with ‘Birdland’ the most easily recalled song on the gold-plated Heavy Weather.

So, then. Is it to be one of two fantastic performances at the Montreux Jazz Festival in 1976, Shorter’s ‘Elegant People’ or Zawinul’s title track from Black Market, both played by arguably the best permutation of the group, which recorded the follow-up, Heavy Weather: Zawinul, Shorter, Pastorius, Badrena and Acuna? The filming, as befits a commercial release, is all you could ask for – up close and personal, so you feel part of Zawinul’s battery of electronic keyboards and Badrena’s array of Latin percussion – and the band plays up a storm in both numbers. If anything, ‘Elegant People’ shades it over the more dynamic ‘Black Market’, mainly because the interplay on the latter between Badrena and Acuna, both on incredible form, is almost overpowering: too much emphasis on two temporary members at the expense of its three prime movers. There’s more space, more room to breathe and to sit back and appreciate on ‘Elegant People’, and rather more focus on Jaco. And it’s nice to see Shorter playing the bigger horn for a change.

Nevertheless, I plumped finally for Pastorius’ ‘Teen Town’ from two years on at Offenbach in Germany. Visually, it’s a little murky and clearly inferior to the Montreux videos. What’s more, the band had become a quartet by this time, with Pete Erskine on drums and drums alone. It was Weather Report Mk whatever that brought out the double live album 8:30 in 1979. Erskine’s drumming, though, particularly the cymbal work, is so relentless that the percussion back-up is hardly missed at all. Zawinul described this model as 'our best band... We were very sound rhythmically. Everything was there. That band was a killer.' Despite the visual gloom, this is a fantastic performance, with the four musicians so much in tune, so much in synch, so 'rhythmically sound' that you can hardly separate them. It’s great to see the bipolar Pastorius in an upbeat mood, revelling in the complex subterranean bass lines, shuffling around the stage like a happy toddler with a new toy.


One of my key selection criteria is that the live version should be at least as good if not better than the recorded original. It would be very hard to beat the sheer intensity of the third track on side 1 of the album. Even though they stretch out a number that said everything there was to say in just under three minutes to almost three times that length, it’s not in any way gratuitous. Zawinul said 'I cannot just be up there and noodle around waiting for something to happen.' This is a killer band to be sure, with its eye firmly on the prize from first to last. There’s a lot to be said for the extra minutes and some might even say that it's even better as a result. ‘Teen Town’ could have shut down around 4½ minutes, just after the percussion workout with Erskine, Pastorius and Zawinul, but Shorter re-enters the fray and they forge ahead, ramping things up towards an ecstatic unison crescendo before stopping dead in their collective tracks at the merest cue. My! Them boys were real pros.

As an electro-jazz outfit, Weather Report live were, as the Irish say, deadly. If you fancy some more, the double CD Live And Unreleased is a wonderful compendium of live performances in London and the US recorded with different permutations of the band between 1975 and 1983. To finish with one more quote from the Austrian keyboards wizard with the Joe Stalin moustache who would go on to found the highly rhythmic Zawinul Syndicate once Weather Report was taken off the air, 'We had sixteen people on the road. But it was music and it was theatre. They belonged together.'

 

Friday 28 October 2022

Billie Holiday & All Star Band - 'Fine And Mellow'

Time for some blues, and who better than Billie Holiday at the end of her career, when she was a personification of the blues? The focus isn't sharp, but this lends the video a rather spectral quality that seems appropriate for such a legion of giants from the past, many of whom were already metaphorical ghosts from the bygone swing era. It's one of the most famous live broadcasts in jazz history, so even if the music weren't as fine and mellow as it certainly is, it would be impossible to overlook this one.

The performance was broadcast live from CBS Studio 58 on December 8th, 1957 as part of the CBS TV series, The Seven Lively Arts. The Columbia arm of the mighty CBS corporation subsequently released an album based on the broadcast the following year (although it wasn't a direct transcript of this live performance). The assembly of musicians, which has been described as possibly the finest ever, included the three tenor saxophonists who were arguably the most important progenitors of their instrument in a jazz context. In order of their solos: Ben Webster, late of the Duke Ellington orchestra and sometimes nicknamed 'The Brute' even though he could melt the heart of the most diehard misanthrope with a single breathy note from his horn, who would move to Europe in 1964 and end his days in Copenhagen; Lester Young, late of the Count Basie orchestra, and Billie Holiday's confidante and 'Prez' (or 'Pres'), who wore his pork-pie hat and blew his light-as-a-feather tenor at the jauntiest of angles; and Coleman Hawkins, 'Bean', who developed his gruff reedy sound in the Fletcher Henderson orchestra as the very first star of the tenor saxophone.

Add to that list: star of the West Coast 'cool school' and pioneer with Chet Baker of the piano-less quartet, Gerry Mulligan on the big baritone horn, looking as preppy as a college boy – as he did in the '50s before the beard took over in the more hirsute '60s; the bridge between Louis Armstrong and Dizzy Gillespie, Roy 'Little Jazz' Eldridge on trumpet, who gave Anita O'Day her first hit with 'Let Me Off Uptown' and whose solo features the kind of top-note theatrics that he employed as a regular for Norman Granz's barn-storming Jazz At The Philharmonic concerts; and, thoroughly 'good egg' and, like Lester Young, a great wearer of hats (although disappointingly both are bare-headed here), Vic Dickenson on trombone.

Virtually unseen, even as we pull back at the end are: house pianist for the Prestige label and Billie Holiday's accompanist for the last two years or so of her life, Mal Waldron on piano; Doc Cheatham on second trumpet; Danny Barker on guitar; Osie Johnson on drums; and Milt Hinton on bass, a keen photographer who recorded many such moments as these for posterity.


It is, though, Billie Holiday of course who's the real star of the show. She's the one who introduces the piece and the 'two kinds of blues: happy blues and sad blues' in a voice that by then was worn out by singing, drugs and her legendary life of abuse, neglect, a certain fame and probably ultimate disappointment. A lot of her late recordings are almost too tired and world-weary to listen to. If she sang 'happy blues' in her early days, skipping lightly through popular songs of the day in a voice that 'rang like a bell and went a mile', just behind the beat of big bands led by the likes of Teddy Wilson and Count Basie, by her early 40s she sounded like she was singing painfully 'sad blues'. The camera takes no prisoners. In close-up, she looks half-stoned and around 20 years older than someone in her early middle age, yet her face lights up as she listens to what these great musicians have to offer, most famously during Lester Young's brief and equally weary solo just past the two-minute marker. As ABC once sang, 'that's the look, the look of love.'

Lady Day and her President were supposedly never actually lovers, but they were soul-mates who shared a special bond and understood each other's pain and glory. Lester Young was scarred by his time in a white man's army at the tail end of the war, which he described as 'a nightmare – one mad nightmare.' He and Billie had just a couple of years to live after this performance was recorded. The great Canadian orchestrator, Gil Evans, was due to make an album with the saxophonist, but revealed that although 'he wanted to make the album, ... he wanted to die more.' Young died of a heart attack in a hotel room after getting back from Paris (his story is conflated with those of Bud Powell and Dexter Gordon in Bertrand Tavernier's film, Round Midnight). Billie followed him a few months later. She was refused permission to adopt a baby and supposedly would feed her pet Chihuahua from a baby's bottle. On her deathbed in hospital, she was arrested for possession of narcotics.

 

Sunday 16 October 2022

Pharoah Sanders Quartet - 'Doktor Pitt'

Is this, as one commenter asks, 'the complete jazz track'? It's certainly a 'fantastic, balanced line up, with some amazing individual performances.' Which is why I chose this amid some hot competition. Not without hesitation. If you thought Jessica Williams' 'Love And Hate' was a stretch at 13 minutes, this is double the running time. It is, however, quite astonishing. And, since the Pharoah left the earth a few short weeks ago at the end of September 2022 to find out whether the Creator does indeed have a master plan, his place in these fifty coolest is ordained.

There were two distinct sides to Pharoah Sanders, jazz musician. There was the raging bull with a tenor saxophone, who could produce the kind of sounds from his instrument more often associated with the labour pains of a water buffalo. And then there was the gentle, contemplative musician, who could caress some of the most lyrical arpeggios from his sax this side of Don Byas and Ben Webster. There's a beautiful duet with one of his favourite pianists, John Hicks, recorded in Frankfurt in 1982, in which he plays Hicks' 'After The Morning' with almost spiritual grace and elegance. And there's a notable version of Sanders' anthemic 'Creator Has A Master Plan' recorded 15 years later in Leverkusen with sumptuous sound – but he spends more time singing in his idiosyncratic, sub-Leon Thomas manner than playing the tenor, as well as taking a back seat in terms of solo time to his longest-serving pianist, William Henderson (who was with the white-bearded one one memorable night at the Leadmill in Sheffield in the 1990s when I learnt 'the secrets of the Pharoah'). Then, finally, there's another Sanders classic, 'Thembi', played on TV's short-lived Night Music show in the company of host David Sanborn on alto sax, with Sonny Sharrock on guitar and Omar Hakim on congas among others. Good as it is, though, it would have been a compromise.

Nothing in Sanders' prophetic appearance or the way he played the sax ever smacked of compromise. After all, he came from Little Rock, Arkansas like General Douglas MacArthur, and learnt his stuff at the side of John Coltrane as part of Coltrane's take-no-prisoners combo in the final phase of the leader's truncated career. In Richard Williams' Guardian's obituary, he quotes an American critic who witnessed the group in Philadelphia a year before Coltrane's premature death from liver cancer and reckoned that 'Pharoah Sanders stole the entire performance.' Another observer, this time in Chicago, described Sanders' urgent sound as a 'mad wind screeching through the root-cellars of Hell.' Roll over, Edgar Allen Poe.

So Doktor Pitt it simply had to be. It's another German live performance, this time recorded at a club that appears to be the Subway in Cologne. But it's rather harder to put a date on it. The line-up of John Hicks on piano, Curtis Lundy on bass and Idris Muhammad suggests either side of 1987, when the same combo recorded Sanders' Africa. Hicks and Muhammad recorded with Sanders the original 12-minute version of 'Doktor Pitt', whoever the good physician was, on the 1980 double album, Journey To The One, then followed it up a year later with the extraordinary live..., with Walter Booker on bass. 'Extraordinary' because it's – in my 'umble – one of the most exciting and intense live albums ever recorded for posterity, with 'Doktor Pitt' almost stealing the honours from the blazing opener, 'You've Got To Have Freedom'. It's five minutes shorter than this chosen video, which ramps up the passion to number 11 on the intensomometer. The sound is a little ragged, so you'll need to ensure that your volume is turned up. Otherwise, just strap yourself in...

After a brief opening statement of theme, Sanders removes the mouthpiece and hands over to John Hicks. Propelled by Curtis Lundy's insistent bass and Idris Muhammad's wonderful metronomic drumming, Hicks launches into the kind of solo that suggests that the spirit entered his soul that night and didn't leave until it was all over. Never mind the invention, the sheer energy he puts into his playing is superhuman. The Pharoah himself must have been used to it, because he stands casually around at first, looking out into the audience as if this was an everyday occurrence. Maybe only McCoy Tyner playing live with Coltrane on 'My Favourite Things' has generated this kind of ecstasy. Approaching the eight-minute mark, Sanders seems to wake up to the fact that something remarkable is going on here. After nine minutes, that keyboard should surely have been smoking. Finally, after ten minutes of soloing, Hicks hands over to Sanders for his turn. The stoic audience applauds, but how come they weren't yelling and hollering and ready to tear down the walls of the Subway? Hicks was a fabulous pianist. I saw him at the North Sea Jazz Festival in den Haag at around the time that this was recorded, in the company of the splendid Ray Drummond, as rotund as his double bass. Together they were so good, so symbiotically joined, that I had to catch them a second time during those three or four days.

Sanders then takes the baton and runs with it for another nine minutes or so, treating us to the full range of yells, squawks and bellows he was known for, without somehow ever quite losing sight of the melody. Look into his eyes around the 14-minute mark and you know that he, too, is high on the spirit. Or the weed. Or both. The rhythm section all this time is still playing with the same if not more intensity. Everyone's close to high-steria by 19½ minutes and there's only one thing for it: hand over to Idris Muhammad for a collective breather. As I've probably mentioned already, I'm not a fan of drum solos (other than Joe Morello's on 'Take Five'), but this one is pretty nifty because it's inventive without being self-indulgent. Besides, he doesn't outstay his welcome, so there's still enough time for the quartet take us back to infinity and beyond before setting us gently down on dry land. Remarkable! How could anyone gainsay that jazz has a strong spiritual element at its core?



Née Farrell Sanders but purportedly given the name 'Pharoah' by Sun Ra, the doyen of the spiritual brand of jazz that Sanders would espouse throughout his career, the saxophonist has always had a special place in my heart – ever since, in fact, a DJ 'saved my life' one night, or at least nudged my musical being a few points west of the moon. I must have been 15 or 16 at the time when I caught all 18 minutes of a piece played by Pete Drummond on his late-night show on Radio Luxembourg. It was 'Let Us Go Into the House of the Lord', a traditional spiritual adapted by Lonnie Liston Smith, Sanders' resident pianist at the time. Even on my dad's tinny transistor radio, it was utterly mesmerising. Proof of its power to stupefy came a few years later when a disreputable college friend stumbled into my bedroom early one morning when I was playing it on my first serious stereo; the B-side of Deaf Dumb Blind, which I tracked down in the very first Virgin Records store in London. His face and hands black with oil after another contretemps with his Arial motorbike, my friend, a heavy metal fan by looks and inclination, stopped dead in his tracks and asked me what in the name of all things glorious was this? Jazz can not only move, it can re-move.

Pharoah Sanders led me deep into jazz and thence into African music. I owe a debt of thanks to a man who bestrode this earth for over 80 years like a giant.